Swansea City manager Garry Monk discusses Harry Kane's impressive form this season and how his team will hope to stifle the Tottenham star on Wednesday.

Swansea have the most points they've ever held at this stage in a Premier League season and have a very good chance of ending it with a team-record total. That's assuming manager Garry Monk can keep his team performing at the 1.48 points-per-game clip they've averaged to date. There are one or two other personal bests Swansea can aim for as motivation for the remainder of the season, and beating Spurs for the first time in Premier League play has to be one of them.

Here are the 5 best saves from Week 27 in the English Premier League including Lukasz Fabianski's heroics against Burnley.

Swansea ground out a 1-0 win at Burnley in a scrappy and fairly uneventful game. It wasn't pretty, but a win is a win. The match as a whole might not have thrown up too many highlights, but there were still encouraging signs for Swansea.

Manager Garry Monk must have liked what he saw when he aired out a new formation in last week's win over Manchester United, because he set his team up the same way this week against a more orthodox Burnley and once again the Swans' new shape looked solid.

Swansea City manager Garry Monk spoke to the media on Thursday, looking ahead to his side's English Premier League trip to Burnley.

After a historic victory over Manchester United on Saturday, the fixture list insists that Swansea come down from cloud nine and back to reality. Relegation-threatened Burnley aren't as illustrious an opponent as United, but with the title a two-horse race, the Clarets arguably have more to play for -- their Premier League status. Swansea will once again need to prove they can match a top-drawer performance against top-drawer opposition with the same level of concentration against a smaller side.

Swansea completed their first-ever league double over Manchester United to dent the Red Devils' hopes of finishing in the Champions League places.

Manchester United had only lost one of 19 matches before Jonjo Shelvey and Swansea put an abrupt end to the Red Devils' good run of form.

For the first time ever, Swansea have beaten Manchester United home and away in the same season.

It's nice to pause long enough to take stock of what Swansea have accomplished at times like these, but there is also a danger that the details of Saturday's 2-1 win might be overlooked in the celebrations. Most exciting is the fact that it showed a glimpse of the future.

Swansea completed their first-ever league double over Manchester United to dent the Red Devils' hopes of finishing in the Champions League places.

Swansea completed their first-ever league double over Manchester United to dent the Red Devils' hopes of finishing in the Champions League places.

Manchester United manager Louis van Gaal was left frustrated by his side's inability to convert their chances as they fell to a 2-1 defeat away at Swansea.

Manchester United had only lost one of 19 matches before Jonjo Shelvey and Swansea put an abrupt end to the Red Devils' good run of form.

SWANSEA, Wales -- Three observations from Swansea's 2-1 victory over Manchester United on Saturday afternoon at the Liberty Stadium.

1. Man United: A better performance, a worse result

What must Louis van Gaal make of English football? For months his Manchester United side have played poorly, enjoyed moments of great fortune and lost just once in 19 games across the hardest period of the season. Then they go to Swansea City, a team that has won just once in the league since Boxing Day, they...

Swansea manager Garry Monk, right, has praised Manchester United's manager Louis van Gaal, left, for his ability to adapt to his opponents but might want to emulate the Dutchman with Swansea only having one Premier League win in 2015.

Swansea play host to Manchester United on Saturday in a game which which pits two very different teams, and two very different managers, against each other. Louis van Gaal will grace the visitor's technical area, a manager who plays the part of eccentric coach to perfection, while Swansea's own Garry Monk will provide staunch sensibility in contrast.

The knock on Van Gaal is that he doesn't know what his best side is, but that's secretly all part of the plan. The Dutchman has carefully cultivated...